A no-garlic-breath garlic is rediscovered

Love garlic, but hate garlic breath? There is some good news for
you: a type of odorless garlic, thought to be extinct, has been rediscovered. The Guardian
reports on the resurgence of aglione, also known as
"kissing garlic", a rarely seen Italian garlic varietal that
is odorless, milder tasting, easier to digest, and doesn't cause
the dreaded "garlic breath."

Two unlikely entrepreneurs are behind this resurgence,
Alessandro Guagni and Lorenzo Bianchi, a construction engineer and
a commercial lawyer. Guagni first stumbled upon aglione
while on holiday in Tuscany, at a farmer's stand that was selling
an unusual looking vegetable. "It was very big. One bulb weighed
from 300 to 800 grams, about 10 times as big as normal garlic. The
taste was very good and very light so we thought about the
possibility of reintroducing it in the market," he said.

After being told by several restaurateurs that
aglione was extinct, the Guagni and Bianchi tracked down a
few local producers who grew the garlic for their personal use. Now
they are growing it commercially on a two-hectare plot, which they
say is enough to cultivate about 30,000 plants.

The garlic allegedly dates back to ancient times, when Etruscans
inhabited the Chiana valley in Tuscany. Aglione was also
present on the island of Giglio. According to legend, it "arrived
on the island in 1544 after the pirate Khayr al-Din killed nearly
everyone on it, forcing the ruling Medici family of Florence to
repopulate it with aglione-loving inhabitants of the
Chiana valley, who brought it with them."

For now you are unlikely to see it on supermarket shelves since
the production is so small. However, if other growers become
interested in aglione, you might one day be able to eat
pasta aglio e olio with gusto on date night.